James Garfield

U.S. President

Born: 19 November 1831

Died: 19 September 1881 (assassination)

Birthplace: Orange, Ohio

Best known as:

President of the United States, March-September 1881

Born in a log cabin to poor, uneducated parents, James Garfield went on to be a scholar, Civil War hero, U.S. congressman and, eventually, president of the United States. First elected to congress in 1862, he spent nearly 18 years there until winning a Senate seat in 1880. He got involved in the 1880 presidential race as a supporter of Secretary of the Treasury John Sherman, a fellow Ohio Republican. But Garfield himself ended up as a dark horse candidate and narrowly defeated Democrat Winfield Scott Hancock for the presidency. Unfortunately, Garfield's rags-to-riches story came to an abrupt end when a disgruntled Republican supporter, Charles Guiteau, shot Garfield twice on 2 July 1881, just four months after the president had been sworn in. Garfield lingered on through the summer and died in Elberon, New Jersey on 19 September 1881. His vice president, Chester A. Arthur, was sworn in as president on 20 September 1881.

Extra credit:

His wife was Lucretia Rudolph Garfield, and together they had seven children, five of whom lived to adulthood... It is said that Garfield used to amuse friends by simultaneously writing Latin with one hand and Greek with the other.